Mostrando 10 resultados de: 10
Filtros aplicados
Subtipo de publicación
Article(10)
Publisher
Biotropica(3)
Ornitologia Neotropical(2)
Acta Oecologica(1)
Diversity(1)
Ecology and Evolution(1)
Different responses of taxonomic and functional bird diversity to forest fragmentation across an elevational gradient
ArticleAbstract: Many studies have investigated how habitat fragmentation affects the taxonomic and functional diversPalabras claves:Abundance, ECUADOR, Functional diversity, Monitoring, Richness, TraitsAutores:Böhning-Gaese K., Boris A. Tinoco, Edwin Zárate, Neuschulz E.L., Quitián M., Schleuning M., Vinicio SantillanFuentes:scopusDirect and indirect effects of elevation, climate and vegetation structure on bird communities on a tropical mountain
ArticleAbstract: Climate and vegetation structure are important pbkp_redictors of biodiversity along mountain slopes.Palabras claves:Andes, Avian diversity patterns, ECUADOR, Mountain biodiversity, Structural equation modellingAutores:Böhning-Gaese K., Boris A. Tinoco, Edwin Zárate, Neuschulz E.L., Quitián M., Schleuning M., Vinicio SantillanFuentes:scopusLand use change has stronger effects on functional diversity than taxonomic diversity in tropical Andean hummingbirds
ArticleAbstract: Land use change modifies the environment at multiple spatial scales, and is a main driver of speciesPalabras claves:Deforestation, Disturbance, ECUADOR, Functional traits, Montane forest, pollination servicesAutores:Boris A. Tinoco, Graham C.H., Vinicio SantillanFuentes:googlescopusHabitat alteration modifies the structure and function of mixed-species flocks in an Andean landscape
ArticleAbstract: Understanding the responses of species interactions to land-use change is a key challenge in ecologyPalabras claves:anthropogenic disturbance, bird conservation, Cajas national park, ECUADOR, Interaction networks, non-trophic interactionsAutores:Bernarda Vásquez-Ávila, Boris A. Tinoco, Carlos Iván Espinosa Iñiguez, Knowlton J.L.Fuentes:googlescopusKnowledge gaps or change of distribution ranges? Explaining new records of birds in the ecuadorian tumbesian region of endemism
ArticleAbstract: The change in the distribution range is a common response of various species facing the effects of aPalabras claves:Distribution, Dry tropical forest, ECUADOR, global change, Species movementAutores:Adrian Orihuela-Torres, Boris A. Tinoco, Carlos Iván Espinosa Iñiguez, Leonardo Ordóñez-DelgadoFuentes:googlescopusSeasonality of the bird community in the Tumbesian dry forest in south west Ecuador
ArticleAbstract: The Tumbesian region is of global priority for biodiversity conservation due to the high levels of ePalabras claves:Community, ECUADOR, Guilds, Intratropical migrants, seasonality, Tumbesian dry forestAutores:Boris A. TinocoFuentes:googlescopusRapid colonization of Ecuador by the tropical mockingbird (mimus gilvus)
ArticleAbstract: Some species benefit from anthropogenic ecosystem disturbance expanding their distribution ranges raPalabras claves:anthropogenic disturbance, Distribution, ECUADOR, Mimus gilvus, Niche, range expansionAutores:Boris A. Tinoco, Juan F. Freile, Juan Manuel Aguilar UllauriFuentes:googlescopusSurvival estimates of bird species across altered habitats in the tropical Andes
ArticleAbstract: The probability of long-term persistence of a population is strongly determined by adult survival raPalabras claves:anthropogenic disturbance, Demography, ECUADOR, Montane forest, Secondary forestAutores:Andrea Karina Arriciaga Nieto, Boris A. Tinoco, Graham C.H., Graham L., Juan Manuel Aguilar Ullauri, Latta S.C., Pedro Xavier Astudillo WebsterFuentes:googlescopusTemporal stability in species richness but reordering in species abundances within avian assemblages of a tropical Andes conservation hot spot
ArticleAbstract: As the pace of environmental change increases, there is an urgent need for quantitative data revealiPalabras claves:ECUADOR, global change, Monitoring, Montane forest, protected areas, reordering, TurnoverAutores:Andrea Karina Arriciaga Nieto, Boris A. Tinoco, Graham C.H., Latta S.C., Pedro Xavier Astudillo WebsterFuentes:googlescopusThe distributions of morphologically specialized hummingbirds coincide with floral trait matching across an Andean elevational gradient
ArticleAbstract: Morphological trait matching between species affects resource partitioning in mutualistic systems. YPalabras claves:ECUADOR, Modularity, mutualism, NETWORKS, plants, Podocarpus National Park, pollination, resource partitioning, SpecializationAutores:Boris A. Tinoco, Colwell R.K., Cumbicus Torres N.L., Dalsgaard B., Fjeldså J., Martín González A.M., Rahbek C., Sonne J., Zanata T.B.Fuentes:googlescopus